-
1 crouler
crouler [kʀule]➭ TABLE 1 intransitive verb[maison, mur] to collapse* * *kʀuleverbe intransitif1) ( s'effondrer) to collapse; ( se désagréger) to crumble2) ( être submergé)crouler sous — [personne] to be weighed down by
* * *kʀule vi1) (= ployer)crouler sous [poids] — to collapse under, [travail] to be snowed under with
crouler sous les applaudissements; La salle croulait sous les applaudissements. — The applause nearly brought the house down., The building shook with the thunderous applause.
2) (sans complément) vieilli (= s'écrouler) to collapse* * *crouler verb table: aimer vi1 [mur, bâtiment] ( s'effondrer) to collapse; ( se désagréger) to crumble; [butte de terre] to fall down; se laisser crouler dans un fauteuil to collapse into an armchair;2 ( aller à la ruine) [empire, pays, régime] to collapse; crouler de toutes parts to collapse on all sides;3 ( être submergé) crouler sous to be weighed down by [dettes, travail, projets]; [personne] to be inundated with [fleurs]; to be weighed down with [paquets]; [arbre] to be weighed down with [fruits]; [ville] to crumble under [obus]; crouler sous les applaudissements [salle] to resound with applause; crouler sous le poids de [meuble, étagère, table] to groan under the weight of.[krule] verbe intransitif
См. также в других словарях:
collapse — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 building, etc. suddenly falling ADJECTIVE ▪ sudden ▪ the sudden collapse of the bridge PHRASES ▪ be in danger of collapse 2 medical condition ADJECTIVE … Collocations dictionary
collapse — 1 verb 1 STRUCTURE (I) if a building, wall, piece of furniture etc collapses, it suddenly falls down because its structure is weak or because it has been hit with a sudden violent force: The roof is in danger of collapsing. | Uncle Ted s chair… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
go — 1 verb past tense went, past participle gone, 3rd person singular present tense goes TO MOVE AWAY FROM THE SPEAKER 1 LEAVE SOMEWHERE (I) to leave a place to go somewhere else; depart: I wanted to go, but Anna wanted to stay. | It s late; I must… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
strain — strain1 [streın] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(worry)¦ 2¦(difficulty)¦ 3¦(force)¦ 4¦(injury)¦ 5¦(plant/animal)¦ 6¦(quality)¦ 7¦(way of saying something)¦ 8 strains of something ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [Sense: 1 4; Date: 1500 1600; Origin … Dictionary of contemporary English
hold — 1 verb past tense and past participle held IN YOUR HANDS/ARMS 1 a) (T) to have something firmly in your hand or arms: He was holding a knife in one hand. | Can you hold the groceries for me while I open the door? | I held the baby in my arms. |… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
hold — hold1 W1S1 [həuld US hould] v past tense and past participle held [held] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(in your hand/arms)¦ 2¦(event)¦ 3¦(keep something in position)¦ 4¦(job/title)¦ 5¦(keep/store)¦ 6¦(keep something available for somebody)¦ 7¦(keep somebody… … Dictionary of contemporary English